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Old Market and Corn Market Halifax, as it appeared in the year 1886

© Calderdale MBC

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Old Market and Corn Market Halifax, as it appeared in the year 1886

J. R. Smith print of the Old Market and Old Corn Market, Halifax, West Yorkshire.

Author: J. R. Smith
Date: 1892
Location: Halifax
Format: Print
Document ID: 100446
Library ID: 35499016

Print from 1892 drawn by Joseph Rideal Smith and printed by Stott Brothers, lithographers of Halifax, from Smith's series of a dozen views, "Old Halifax", the set selling for 50 shillings. So commercially successful were Smith's drawings that he became known as "Old Halifax".




From the print: "This View is respectfully dedicated to Alderman James Wm. Davis, F.L.A, F.G.L &c, [??] of Chevenedge, Mayor of Halifax 1890-1, 1891-2 by his Worship's humble and obedient Servant, J.R. Smith."




Joseph Rideal Smith was born in 1837 at the Waggoners Inn, which was on the top side of Northgate. He studied as an architect, but due to ill health returned to Halifax in 1870, gaining employment at the Duke of Bedford's estate. After this he worked as the town's first sanitary inspector, he had great influence in building the Halifax goyte* system. He married Miss Empsall of Craven Edge in 1873 and they had one daughter. Smith died in 1915.




After showing one of his sepia drawings based on an old photograph to Alderman Ramsden of the Waggoners Inn, Ramsden was so impressed that he encouraged Smith's work. Smith went on to produce a set of prints bound into books with the original print on the front cover. Each print was dedicated to local patrons and people of standing.




*goyte: man-made underground passage to channel water.

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